Nancy Bowen
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Nancy Bowen (born 1955) is an American visual artist.Koplos, Janet. "Nancy Bowen: An Inside View," ''Glass'', Winter 1995, p. 26–31.Oldknow, Tina
''Collecting Contemporary Glass: Art and Design after 1990 from the Corning Museum of Glass''
Corning, NY: Corning Museum of Glass, 2014. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
She is known for two main groups of work that share qualities of hybridity and multiplicity in their materials and inspirations: largely abstract sculptures and collaged works on paper.Schwabsky, Barry
"Nancy Bowen,"
''Artforum'', April 1991. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
Kirshner, Judith Russi
"Nancy Bowen,"
''Artforum'', April 1991. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
Hirsch, Faye
"Witches take over Westchester,"
''Hyperallergic'', April 2, 2023. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
Writers such as curator Nina Felshin situate her sculpture amid a strain of
feminist art The feminist art movement refers to the efforts and accomplishments of feminists internationally to produce feminist art, art that reflects women's lives and experiences, as well as to change the foundation for the production and perception of co ...
based in the physical body (rather than
social construction Social constructionism is a term used in sociology, social ontology, and communication theory. The term can serve somewhat different functions in each field; however, the foundation of this theoretical framework suggests various facets of s ...
), which emerged in the 1980s to reclaim female imagery from male-dominated conceptions of women often theorized under the concept of the "
male gaze In feminist theory, the male gaze is the act of depicting women and the world in the visual arts and in literature from a masculine, heterosexual perspective that presents and represents women as sexual objects for the pleasure of the heterosex ...
."Felshin, Nina. ''Figuring the Body: Nancy Bowen & Nancy Davidson'', Middletown, CT: Center for the Arts, Wesleyan University, 1998.Schlegel, Amy. "Figuring the Body: Nancy Bowen and Nancy Davidson," ''Sculpture'', November 1998, p. 67–69.Silas, Silas and Chrysanne Stathacos
"A conversation with Nancy Bowen,"
''Mommy'', May 2018. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
According to Felshin, in Bowen's work this involves an "exploration of the fragmented, internal body as a means of communicating the visceral experience of mbodiment… By fashioning anatomically evocative objects from tactile, sensuous and sometimes decorative 'craft' materials … heemphasizes the body as a sensory instrument."Filipovna, Valerie. "Nancy Bowen: Visceral Sculptor," ''Paper Magazine'', October 1993, p. 26.Raynor, Vivien
"Two Shows: 'Bad Girls' and 'Personal Visions,'"
''The New York Times'', March 4, 1990. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
Zimmer, William

''The New York Times'', February 15, 1998, p. 18. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
Bowen's later collages connect her New England roots and Eastern spiritualism through the language of contemporary art.Princenthal, Nancy. ''Nancy Bowen'', Purchase, NY: Purchase College, 2011.Yaniv, Etty
"Nancy Bowen: The Story of Objects,"
''Art Spiel'', June 10, 2019. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
Bowen has exhibited at venues including the
Museum of Arts and Design The Museum of Arts and Design (MAD), based in Manhattan, New York City, collects, displays, and interprets objects that document contemporary and historic innovation in craft, art, and design. In its exhibitions and educational programs, the ...
(New York),
Boston Center for the Arts Boston is the capital and most populous city in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in the United States. The city serves as the cultural and financial center of New England, a region of the Northeastern United States. It has an area of and a ...
,
Corcoran Gallery of Art The Corcoran Gallery of Art is a former art museum in Washington, D.C., that is now the location of the Corcoran School of the Arts and Design, a part of the George Washington University. Founded in 1869 by philanthropist William Wilson Corco ...
,
Contemporary Arts Center The Contemporary Arts Center (abbreviated CAC) is a contemporary art museum in Cincinnati, Ohio and one of the first contemporary art institutions in the United States. The CAC is a non-collecting museum that focuses on new developments in pain ...
in Cincinnati, Museum fur Angewandte Kunst (Frankfort) and
Corning Museum of Glass The Corning Museum of Glass is a museum in Corning (city), New York, Corning, New York, United States, dedicated to the art, history, and science of glass. It was founded in 1951 by Corning Incorporated, Corning Glass Works and currently has a ...
.Preu, Nancy and Sabine Runde (eds)
''Corporal identity''
Frankfort/New York: Museum Angewandte Kunst/Museum of Arts & Design, 2003. Retrieved October 32, 2024.
McQuaid, Cate. "On balance, 'Somatic Scales' explores bodies and minds," ''The Boston Globe'', July 16, 2004.Burchard, Hank
"Turned On at the Corcoran,"
''The Washington Post'', June 8, 1995. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
Artfacts
"Body and Soul - Aspects of Recent Figurative Sculpture,"
Exhibitions. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
She has received awards from
Anonymous Was A Woman "Anonymous Was a Woman" is the fourth episode of the eleventh season of the American police procedural drama ''NCIS'', and the 238th episode overall. It originally aired on CBS in the United States on October 15, 2013. The episode is written b ...
and the
National Endowment for the Arts The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) is an independent agency of the United States federal government that offers support and funding for projects exhibiting artistic excellence. It was created in 1965 as an independent agency of the feder ...
, among others.Anonymous Was A Woman
Nancy Bowen
2017 Artists. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
National Endowment for the Arts. "National Recipients,
''A Creative Legacy: A History of the National Endowment for the Arts''
New York: Harry N. Abrams, 2001, p. 211. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
Bowen is a professor emerita at Purchase College, SUNY and is based in Brooklyn, New York.Purchase College
Nancy Bowen
Profiles. Retrieved October 22, 2024.


Early life and career

Bowen was born in
Providence, Rhode Island Providence () is the List of capitals in the United States, capital and List of municipalities in Rhode Island, most populous city of the U.S. state of Rhode Island. The county seat of Providence County, Rhode Island, Providence County, it is o ...
in 1955, into a family that dates back twelve generations in New England. She was prompted by an early interest in biology to enroll in pre-med at
Stanford University Leland Stanford Junior University, commonly referred to as Stanford University, is a Private university, private research university in Stanford, California, United States. It was founded in 1885 by railroad magnate Leland Stanford (the eighth ...
, but soon turned to architecture, and then art. After transferring to the
School of the Art Institute of Chicago The School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) is a Private university, private art school associated with the Art Institute of Chicago (AIC) in Chicago, Illinois. Tracing its history to an art students' cooperative founded in 1866, which gr ...
(SAIC), she earned a BFA in 1978.Henley, John. "Nancy Bowen: Scenes de la Vie Surreale," ''Art Press'', February 1981. At SAIC, she was drawn to
surrealism Surrealism is an art movement, art and cultural movement that developed in Europe in the aftermath of World War I in which artists aimed to allow the unconscious mind to express itself, often resulting in the depiction of illogical or dreamlike s ...
,
outsider art Outsider art is Fine art, art made by Autodidacticism, self-taught individuals who are untrained and untutored in the traditional arts with typically little or no contact with the Convention (norm), conventions of the art worlds. The term ''ou ...
,
feminism Feminism is a range of socio-political movements and ideology, ideologies that aim to define and establish the political, economic, personal, and social gender equality, equality of the sexes. Feminism holds the position that modern soci ...
and the work of women artists like
Louise Bourgeois Louise Joséphine Bourgeois (; 25 December 191131 May 2010) was a French-American artist. Although she is best known for her large-scale sculpture and installation art, Bourgeois was also a prolific painter and printmaker. She explored a varie ...
and her teacher Ree Morton, interests that planted the seeds of her longstanding exploration of the physical experience of the female body. Bowen moved to New York City in 1980 and began exhibiting her work, appearing in group shows at the
SculptureCenter SculptureCenter is a not-for-profit, contemporary art museum located in Long Island City, Queens, New York City. It was founded in 1928 as "The Clay Club" by Dorothea Denslow. In 2013, SculptureCentre attracted around 13,000 visitors.Randy Kenned ...
, and
Queens Museum The Queens Museum (formerly the Queens Museum of Art) is an art museum and educational center at Flushing Meadows–Corona Park in Queens, New York City, United States. Established in 1972, the museum includes the '' Panorama of the City of New ...
,
Hyde Park Art Center The Hyde Park Art Center (HPAC) is a visual arts organization and the oldest alternative exhibition space in the city of Chicago. Since 2006, HPAC has been located just north of Hyde Park Boulevard, at 5020 S.Cornell Avenue, in the Kenwood neigh ...
(Chicago),
Centre d'Art Contemporain Genève The Centre d'Art Contemporain Genève (Centre) is a contemporary art exhibition centre (a ''Kunsthalle'') in Geneva, Switzerland, founded by Adelina von Fürstenberg in 1974.
and Institute for Contemporary Art, Richmond.Sheppard-Gallagher, Ileen
''Activated Walls''
Flushing, NY: Queens Museum, 1984. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
Leonhart, Mark. "The Non-Naïve Show," ''The New Art Examiner'', March 1980.Boyd, Julia. ''Sculpture Now: Recent Figurative Works'', Richmond, VA: The Institute of Contemporary Arts, Virginia Museum, 1983. Her first solo exhibitions took place at Galerie Farideh Cadot (Paris, 1981) and Susan Caldwell Gallery in (New York, 1983).Girard, Xavier. "Nancy Bowen, Galerie Farideh Cadot," ''Art Press'', June 1981. Her early work consisted of small, symbolic dollhouse-like constructions—formally balanced settings characterized by odd angles and complex perspectives that were absent people.Haydon, Harold. "Trio's 'non-naïve' show a major debut," ''Chicago Sun Times'', September 9, 1980. She gradually introduced anonymous figures in metaphorical, dynamic poses exploring female experience and sexuality, placed over vividly painted relief or shadowbox structures, and later, abstract sculptural settings.Fort, Susan. "Group Show: Zabriskie," ''Arts'', November 1982.Henry, Gerrit. "Invitational I," ''ARTnews'', November 1982. In the later 1980s, she explored that theme through larger-than-life figures and heads bearing an Eastern influence which she melded with simple sculptural shapes.Brenson, Michael

''The New York Times'', June 3, 1986, p. 18. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
Raven, Arlene. "Art Throb," ''Lears'', November 1989. After completing an MFA degree at
Hunter College Hunter College is a public university in New York City, United States. It is one of the constituent colleges of the City University of New York and offers studies in more than one hundred undergraduate and postgraduate fields across five schools ...
in 1990,Gouveia, Georgette. "A Circle of Art," ''The Journal News'', January 27, 2006, p.27–28. Bowen began producing the abstracted sculptural work for which she became more widely known, receiving critical attention for solo and two-person exhibitions at
Annina Nosei Annina Nosei (born 1939) is an Italian-born art dealer and gallerist. Nosei is best known for being Jean-Michel Basquiat’s first art dealer and providing him with studio space in the basement of her gallery. From 1981 to 2006, the Annina Nosei Ga ...
Gallery (1990–93)Koplos, Janet. "Nancy Bowen at Annina Nosei," ''Art in America'', February 1994. and One Great Jones (1996) in New York,Canning, Susan. "Nancy Bowen," ''The New Art Examiner'', April 1997, p. 48. Betsy Rosenfield Gallery (Chicago, 1991), and
Wesleyan University Wesleyan University ( ) is a Private university, private liberal arts college, liberal arts university in Middletown, Connecticut, United States. It was founded in 1831 as a Men's colleges in the United States, men's college under the Methodi ...
(1998). During that period, she began teaching, serving at
Sarah Lawrence College Sarah Lawrence College (SLC) is a Private university, private liberal arts college in Yonkers, New York, United States. Founded as a Women's colleges in the United States, women's college in 1926, Sarah Lawrence College has been coeducational ...
,
Columbia University Columbia University in the City of New York, commonly referred to as Columbia University, is a Private university, private Ivy League research university in New York City. Established in 1754 as King's College on the grounds of Trinity Churc ...
,
Massachusetts College of Art Massachusetts College of Art and Design, branded as MassArt, is a public college of visual and applied art in Boston, Massachusetts. Founded in 1873, it is one of the nation's oldest art schools, and the only publicly funded independent art sch ...
and
Bard College Bard College is a private college, private Liberal arts colleges in the United States, liberal arts college in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York. The campus overlooks the Hudson River and Catskill Mountains within the Hudson River Historic District ...
between 1990 and 2004. Bowen wrote about her experiences with institutional sexism and male privilege in the first part of her university career in a 2018 ''Hyperallergic'' opinion article titled, "The Pervasive Power of Male Privilege at America’s Elite Universities."Bowen, Nancy
"The Pervasive Power of Male Privilege at America’s Elite Universities,"
''Hyperallergic'', September 10, 2018. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
In 2001, she joined the art faculty at Purchase College, SUNY, serving as a professor in sculpture until 2024, when she was named a professor emerita.


Work and reception

''Artforums
Barry Schwabsky Barry Schwabsky (b. Paterson, New Jersey, in 1957) is an American art critic, art historian and poet. He has taught at the School of Visual Arts, Pratt Institute, New York University, Yale University, and Goldsmiths College, among others. Ar ...
described Bowen's work as "pointed extrapolations of form; a cross-pollination of craft traditions
ith The Ith () is a ridge in Germany's Central Uplands which is up to 439 m high. It lies about 40 km southwest of Hanover and, at 22 kilometers, is the longest line of crags in North Germany. Geography Location The Ith is i ...
sculptural concerns." Her sculpture has been linked to artists such as Louise Bourgeois, Rona Pondick and
Kiki Smith Kiki Smith (born January 18, 1954) is a German-born American artist whose work has addressed the themes of sex, birth and regeneration. Her figurative work of the late 1980s and early 1990s confronted subjects such as AIDS, feminism, and gender ...
—and further back to Brancusi and
Jean Arp Hans Peter Wilhelm Arp (; ; 16 September 1886 – 7 June 1966), better known as Jean Arp in English, was a German-French sculptor, painter and poet. He was known as a Dadaist and an abstract artist. Early life Arp was born Hans Peter Wilhelm Ar ...
—who sought to evoke the body without actually depicting it.Hackett, Regina. "Bowen's abstract sculptures reflect curves of human form," ''Seattle Post-Intelligencer'', July 20, 1992. Like those artists, Bowen creates metaphoric and metonymic representations of physical, psychological or social experience using strategies such as fragmentation, abstraction, exaggeration and excess. In Bowen's case, her concern has largely focused on haptic experience of the (primarily) female body, often through an inside-out focus what has been called the "
grotesque body The grotesque body is a concept, or literary trope, put forward by Russian literary critic Mikhail Bakhtin in his study of François Rabelais' work. The essential principle of grotesque realism is degradation, the lowering of all that is abstract, ...
." Her ambiguous objects often suggest partly familiar yet alien forms—amalgamations of distorted bodies, uncertain species, furniture and household objects. As a result, critics often describe her work in contradictory terms: beautiful and gross, erotic and vulgar, whimsical and discomfiting, attractive and repelling. Judith Russi Kirshner placed Bowen's "odd corporeality … someplace between the imaginative poles represented by
Disney The Walt Disney Company, commonly referred to as simply Disney, is an American multinational mass media and entertainment industry, entertainment conglomerate (company), conglomerate headquartered at the Walt Disney Studios (Burbank), Walt Di ...
and Bosch." The hybrid character of Bowen's sculpture and collages extends beyond form to her incongruous mixing of disparate materials, techniques, sources and content.Canning, Susan. ''Nancy Bowen: Sometimes a Body Is Not Just a Body'', Valhalla, NY: Westchester Center for the Arts, 2023. Critics suggest that her use of elements not inherently linked to the body seduces viewers to grapple with the work's sometimes visceral subject matter. In her sculpture, she has consistently employed unusual combinations of materials related to craft (and by that association, to women)—clay, glass, wax, ribbon, beads, synthetic hair, copper and wire—as well as non-Western symbolic systems of representation and thought. She takes a similar, loosely archeological approach to her works on paper, scavenging ornamental motifs from other cultures and belief systems that she mixes, adds and redacts in relation to more personal elements.Sentilles, Sarah
"Nancy Bowen: Behold, I Am Making a New Thing,"
''Nancy Bowen: For Each Ecstatic Instant'', New York: Kentler International Drawing Space, 2018. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
''Hyperallergic'' critic
Faye Hirsch Faye Hirsch (born 1956) is an American writer, art critic, educator, and editor, specializing in contemporary art and contemporary printmaking. She is part of the faculty in the school of art and design at State University of New York at Purchase. ...
describes them as "elegant images that vault through time and place, from chakras … to astrological signs and defunct alphabets."


Sculpture, 1989–present

In the early 1990s Bowen orchestrated biomorphic ceramic and blown-glass vessels and unconventional, curved metal supports into sculptures that functioned as expressions of sensory knowledge, feminist critique and send-ups of pedestal sculpture traditions (e.g., ''Astriction'', 1990).Raven, Arlene. "A Breed Apart," ''The Village Voice'', November 2, 1993.Levin, Kim. "Nancy Bowen," ''The Village Voice'', October 26, 1993. Alternately graceful and clunky, ethereal and carnal, they triggered contradictory associations: prosthetic devices and ornamental plant stands, ambiguous body parts, constricting 19th-century undergarment support. Several of these works, including her ''Seven Aspects of the Body'' series, were related to the Indian
chakra A chakra (; ; ) is one of the various focal points used in a variety of ancient meditation practices, collectively denominated as Tantra, part of the inner traditions of Hinduism and Buddhism. The concept of the chakra arose in Hinduism. B ...
s—the seven spiritual points of energy in the body according to
Hindu philosophy Hindu philosophy or Vedic philosophy is the set of philosophical systems that developed in tandem with the first Hinduism, Hindu religious traditions during the Iron Age in India, iron and Classical India, classical ages of India. In Indian ...
—evoking the actions of subtitles, such as ''Touching'', ''Burning'', ''Breathing'' and ''Visceral Hearing''. Bowen took a more expansive approach in subsequent pieces, using cascading forms to viscerally represent bodily sensations (''Aural Obsession'', 1993) or female roles in an unsentimental, sometimes disconcerting fashion, as in ''Parthenogenesis'' (1993), a structure of thorny, rose-cane-like branches with seven nesting grub forms made of glass.Katz, Vincent. "Nancy Bowen at One Great Jones," ''Art in America'', September 1997, p. 113. Her exhibition "Figuring the Body" (1998, with Nancy Davidson) was anchored by the elaborate floor piece ''Black Heart'', which featured a gigantic heart of clay sprouting tentacle-like copper wires that spilled onto a bed of turmeric powder rimmed by blood-red, leaf-like forms. In the 2000s, Bowen produced open, mixed-media structures that reviewers likened to futuristic growths suggesting "fantastical gardens" or part-plant, part-creature species.Silver, Joanne. "Scales Weighs Body, mind, spirit," ''The Boston Herald'', June 13. 2004. ''Boston Globe'' critic Cate McQuaid described works like ''Cerebral Flora'' (2004) as "comical, excited and strangely beautiful" pieces that "make seen the unseen—the explosion of an idea or an anatomical eruption." Similarly, ''Exalt'' (2007) featured a Gaudi-like pedestal studded with mirrors sprouting a vine with blooming resin ruffs. Bowen introduced more imposing, massed structures implying spiritual power and totems embedded with powerfully female imagery in her later works. In ''Territory'' (2010) she draped a lacy garment of blue beads over a swelling, mountainous, vaguely anthropomorphic figure of unpainted white plaster topped with a jeweled porcelain tower. ''Parasol'' (2010) was a swelling, curvy plaster form sprouting a cast-plaster bamboo pole crowned with a blue-beaded, parasol-like tiara, while ''Artemis Dilemma'' (2016) drew upon the multi-breasted, ancient
Artemis In ancient Greek religion and Greek mythology, mythology, Artemis (; ) is the goddess of the hunting, hunt, the wilderness, wild animals, transitions, nature, vegetation, childbirth, Kourotrophos, care of children, and chastity. In later tim ...
statue of
Ephesus Ephesus (; ; ; may ultimately derive from ) was an Ancient Greece, ancient Greek city on the coast of Ionia, in present-day Selçuk in İzmir Province, Turkey. It was built in the 10th century BC on the site of Apasa, the former Arzawan capital ...
, placing a giant conch shell on a mid-section of pink cast-ceramic breasts and a decorative base set on a small chair.


Works on paper, 2010–present

Bowen's analog-digital collages coalesce the disparate cultures and languages of contemporary art, laconic Yankee practicalism and Eastern belief into what critic Nancy Princenthal called works of "hypnotic complexity." The layered works she exhibited at Purchase College in 2011 combined meteorological and astronomical lists and text from 19th-century farmers' almanacs (from her father's collection), rubbings of early American tombstones taken by her grandfather and linear patterns recalling Eastern imagery. They included ''Blue Angel'', a collage in which she doubled a grave marker impression of a winged skull over a checkered ground of almanac entries webbed with black thread and colored-paper circles that suggested a Tantric chart. Her painted and text-filled pieces exhibited at the Kentler International Drawing Space (2018) pieced together fragments of maps, engravings, pamphlets, stamps, picture frames and book pages, evoking unidentified myths, archetypes and rituals, often involving the female body.Kentler International Drawing Space
"Nancy Bowen, For Each Ecstatic Instant,"
Exhibitions. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
Writer Sarah Sentilles identified redaction as crucial to this work "as a critical tool
hat A hat is a Headgear, head covering which is worn for various reasons, including protection against weather conditions, ceremonial reasons such as university graduation, religious reasons, safety, or as a fashion accessory. Hats which incorpor ...
reminds viewers there is always misinformation and missing information" and as "a refusal of oppressive meaning-making systems." For example, in ''All American Personalities with Kali's Tongues'' (2018) Bowen covered over stories from an old book on "great American personalities"—all of them male—with color blocks and an abstraction of a woman with strands emitting from her body that suggested a reclamation of power. In her thirty-year survey at the Westchester Center for the Arts (2023) Bowen presented collages alongside sculpture and a related installation referencing her family history.Van Der Wende, Andre
"Nancy Bowen makes Intergenerational Amends,"
''The Provincetown Independent'', October 6, 2021. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
The installation, ''Spectral Evidence'' (2021), consisted of twenty squat "grave markers" with wings, skull heads and shoes projecting from beneath that stood before a ghostly, faceless life-size figure wearing a black
hair shirt A cilice , also known as a sackcloth, was originally a garment or undergarment made of coarse cloth or animal hair (a hairshirt) worn close to the skin. It is used by members of various Christian traditions (including the Catholic, Lutheran, A ...
. Each marker carried the name of a person killed during the
Salem witch trials The Salem witch trials were a series of hearings and prosecutions of people accused of witchcraft in Province of Massachusetts Bay, colonial Massachusetts between February 1692 and May 1693. More than 200 people were accused. Not everyone wh ...
, which were presided over by nine judges, among them Bowen's ancestor,
Samuel Sewall Samuel Sewall (; March 28, 1652 – January 1, 1730) was a judge, businessman, and printer in the Province of Massachusetts Bay, best known for his involvement in the Salem witch trials, for which he later apologized, and his essay ''The Selling ...
, who later repented.Fox, Jonathan Charles
"Are you a good witch?"
''River Reporter'', June 2, 2021. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
Bowen collaborated with the poet Elizabeth Willis—a descendant of one of the women executed as a witch—on the show's related series of collages and a book, ''Spectral Evidence: The Witch Book'' (2023).Willis Elizabeth and Nancy Bowen
''Spectral Evidence: The Witch Book''
New York: Litmus Press, 2023. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
Dora Maar Cultural Center
Nancy Bowen
Artists. Retrieved October 22, 2024.


Recognition

Bowen has received the Anonymous was a Woman Award (2017) and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts (1994), New York Foundation for the Arts (1989) and Art Matters (1986), among other recognition.MacDowell
Nancy Bowen
Artists. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
She has been awarded artist residencies from the American Antiquarian Society,American Antiquarian Society
Fellows Directory
Retrieved October 23, 2024.
Dora Maar House (Brown Foundation, France), Jentel Arts, MacDowell Colony, MacDowell, MassMoCA, Sanskriti FoundationSanskriti Foundation
Previous Artists
Retrieved October 23, 2024.
and Yaddo,Yaddo
Artists
Retrieved October 22, 2024.
as well as from craft-oriented organizations such as the Centre International de Recherche sur le Verre et les Arts Plastiques (CIRVA), Pilchuck Glass School and European Ceramics Work Centre.European Ceramics Work Centre
Nancy Bowen
Retrieved October 23, 2024.
Bowen's work belongs to the public art collections of the
Corning Museum of Glass The Corning Museum of Glass is a museum in Corning (city), New York, Corning, New York, United States, dedicated to the art, history, and science of glass. It was founded in 1951 by Corning Incorporated, Corning Glass Works and currently has a ...
, Neuberger Museum of Art and DePauw University Galleries, among others.DePauw University
"Modern and Contemporary Art."
Collection. Retrieved October 22, 2024.


References


External links


Nancy Bowen official websiteNancy Bowen
Anonymous Was A Woman, 2017 winners
Artist's Talk With Nancy Bowen
October 2018
A conversation with Nancy Bowen
Mommy, 2018 {{DEFAULTSORT:Bowen, Nancy American women sculptors 21st-century American artists 20th-century American artists 1955 births Living people